Three-time Academy Award-nominated Actor Mark Ruffalo took his anti-energy rhetoric to a new level this week, calling President Obama, California Governor Jerry Brown and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti “immoral” for their support of fracking.

Ruffalo has received widespread and well-deserved praise for his acting abilities. However, when it comes to his anti-energy industry activism, the critics are against him. In fact, if Academy Awards were conferred for denying science in the face of overwhelming consensus, then Ruffalo would need to build a new trophy room based on his continued and obstinate trumpeting of misinformation and debunkedscience regarding oil and gas development and climate change.

Ruffalo’s “green” credentials include playing The Hulk in The Avengers movies Source: Nerdy-Geek.com

What’s worse, in addition to merely being misinformed, Ruffalo advocates policies that will make climate change worse. Not a good look for someone who once said that President Obama (!) is “almost worse than climate change deniers.”

Ruffalo, a New York resident, made his “immoral” claim at rally in Los Angeles this week. He appeared with, among others, Josh Fox, the director of the dishonest and thoroughly debunkedGasland films. (Fox most recently went unhinged on the BBC and accused former EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson of literally lying about fracking not causing groundwater contamination.)

Ruffalo – who not long ago joined his friend and fellow activist Leonardo Di Caprio on a fact-free “field trip” of Los Angeles oil fields — confirmed yet again that his real goal is to entirely shut down California’s oil and gas industry and nearly half a million direct and indirect jobs and the billions of dollars of tax revenue and economic activity it is provides.

“Climate denial,” Hollywood-style

During the rally in Los Angeles which was held to protest, among other things, the Dakota Access Pipeline, Ruffalo was not there to educate. He was not there to find solutions to the challenge of climate change, on which many in the environmental community, the academy and the industry are hard at work. Instead, he was in quasi-religious-huckster mode, pitting us-against-them, feeding red meat to the fringe of the environmental movement while sounding anything but “loving”:

“The one thing that we can’t forget as we’re fighting is that we’re fighting because we have love inside of us. We’re fighting because we care, and that’s what makes us righteous. That’s what keeps us grounded from the darkness that we’re facing is that inside of us we’re protected with this deep abiding love for our mother and we can’t become like them. We can’t become hardened against our own hearts so we have to make sure that we keep our hearts safe as we engage in these epic struggles in front of us.”

Rousing stuff for fringe activists, to be sure. “Righteous.” “Darkness.” “Epic.” At least Ruffalo has solutions, right? Quite the opposite. He went on to make a truly risible claim:

“I want to say to Mayor Garcetti and Governor Jerry Brown: it’s immoral for you to keep drilling while at the same time calling yourselves climate change leaders. President Obama, it is immoral for you to keep drilling in our state lands, in our federal lands, off our federal waters, while at the same time calling yourself a climate change leader.” [emphasis added].

Governor Jerry Brown. Source: City of Los Angeles

Mayor Garcetti and President Obama. Source: Los Angeles Times

Calling the Mayor, the Governor (deemed a “Green Governor” by the left-leaning Center for American Progress and one of the leading champions of environmental protection of the last 40 years) and the President of the United States “immoral” is certainly dramatic and absolutely disrespectful, but does it square with reality? Not in the least.

The fact is that it is because of advances in fracking technology that the U.S. has experienced a boom in oil and gas development that has allowed us lead the world in carbon emission reductions.

That’s right. The United States is a climate leader because of, not in spite of, advances in oil and gas industry innovation. As natural gas use continues to ramp up for nation’s power plants, emissions are slashed, and as we produce more oil at home, we don’t import it by rail or ship from countries with laxer environmental regulations.

The fact is that most esteemed scientific bodies in the world agree that opposing fracking is climate denial.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which operates under the auspices of the United Nations, is widely regarded, “gold standard” by activists like 350.org’s Bill McKibben and Sierra Club Director Michael Brune.

So what does IPCC have to say about the United States’ efforts to mitigate climate change? In its latest assessment, IPCC notes that it is largely because of natural gas development, made possible by fracking, that the U.S. has been able to dramatically lower greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions:

“A key development since AR4 is the rapid deployment of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling technologies, which has increased and diversified the gas supply… is an important reason for a reduction of GHG emissions in the United States.” (Ch. 7, p. 18)

The IPCC also found that even “[t]aking into account revised estimates for fugitive emissions, recent lifecycle assessment indicate that specific GHG emission are reduced by one half” as more power plants are powered by natural gas.

Immoral? More like “epic.”

And other authorities agree. The Paris-based International Energy Agency’s (IEA) has just released data finding,

“In the United States, emissions declined by 2% (in 2015), as a large switch from coal to natural gas use in electricity generation took place.” [emphasis added]

IEA also hailed the “decline in energy-related CO2 emissions in the United States” as “one of the bright spots in the global picture” crediting “the increased availability of natural gas, linked to the shale gas revolution.” [emphasis added]

In addition, the Breakthrough Institute (BTI) – an group founded by individuals whom Time Magazine recognized as “heroes of the environment” – reported that natural gas has prevented 17 times more carbon dioxide emissions than wind, solar, and geothermal combined.

President Obama even had to school Ruffalo’s partner-in-misinformation Leonardo Di Caprio during the South-by-South Lawn festival recently in Washington, DC, informing him of the climate benefits of natural gas derived from fracking.

This is what CO2 emissions look like compared to the ramp-up of shale gas production since 2007:

If he really cared about climate, Ruffalo and his friends would celebrate, and not oppose, the great strides that the United States has made in slashing GHG emissions. But it’s not about climate: it’s about shutting down the oil and gas industry.

The actor further confirmed his true aim with a tweet sent while appearing in Los Angeles alongside the City’s Sustainability Officer and assorted environmental leaders:

Herb J. Wesson is the Los Angeles City Council President and Ruffalo is asking him to consider a 1,500 foot “setback” between oil wells and various structures in an effort to (as activists said when using the same strategy in Colorado and Texas) “ban fracking everywhere,” which is what would happen with a setback this large in an urban area.

That’s right: Ruffalo wants to completely halt production in the largest urban oil field in the United States, which sits in the second-highest oil-producing county in the third largest oil-producing state. Perhaps the fact that he his tweet received under 300 “likes” from the actor’s 2.7 million followers suggests that the extremism of the actor’s proposals are wearing thin even for his fans.

In any event, the oil industry, not Hollywood, built Los Angeles, so he is unlikely to have success. And his failure means California’s economy and environment will be better off.